375: Section
Read the law. Know your rights. And until the marital rape exception is struck down, fight for those who are still invisible under this code.
"Sexual intercourse by a man with his own wife, the wife not being under fifteen years of age, is not rape." Section 375
In a country where dating apps are ubiquitous, where live-in relationships are common, and where "stealthing" (removing a condom without consent) is becoming a legal issue, the principles of Section 375 are more relevant than ever. Consent is not a one-time stamp. It is an enthusiastic, continuous, and revocable "yes." Don't let the legal number intimidate you. Section 375 is simply society's formal agreement on one fundamental truth: Your body belongs to you. Read the law
Remember the 2019 case of the man who pretended to be a "God" to assault his daughter-in-law? The court convicted him under this clause. However, a lower court created a massive uproar when it ruled that a man who lied about his ability to provide a visa did not commit rape because the physical act was consensual (the infamous 2019 Karnataka High Court ruling). "Sexual intercourse by a man with his own
But the core battle remains the same:
The public raged: "Is lying about a visa not fraud?"
If you follow Bollywood or legal news, you have probably heard the phrase “Section 375” thrown around. It was the title of a powerful 2019 courtroom drama, and it frequently trends during high-profile trials. But for the average citizen, the term often feels abstract—a distant legal jargon left for judges and lawyers.